AuthorTopic: married...living apart (Read 4058 times)

Hi...I'm going to be taking the LSAT in Dec, applying for '03 admission. I have narrowed down schools to a geographical location. I'm married, but will be living away from my husband during the week, and commuting home on wkends. Has anyone else been in the same boat, or know someone who has? I'm nervous, but confident "it's only three years...it will be so worth it in the longrun." He says the same thing, but we are both nervous.

Did this for three years while assigned to a Navy ship in San Diego. This is very hard; harder than you now think.

Here's what I would suggest:

Telephone - Buy a good cell phone plan... I would suggest one with lots of evening and weekend minutes. It is cheaper than a land line at both your home and "apartment."

Food - plan your menu for the week, shop at home, and bring "your" food for the week from home. Double shopping will kill your budget. Also plan to eat "out" (read-fast food) at least 3 times a week because you will want to spend time with classmates or will be too tired to go home and eat.

Commuting - leave home on Sunday evening and go home after your last class of the week (don't wait until the next day). You will die a thousand deaths if you try to drive all the way to school on a Monday morning. If you delay returning home to get a good night's sleep, you'll be leaving for home later and later the next day, cutting into family time. Better to "crash" at home that night.

Laundry - do it at home on the weekend. All other "errands" that take time away from family should be done during the week.

Studying - Study all week. If you have homework over the weekend, do it after the kids go to bed, even if you're up late doing it.

Family - Plan one "thing" for the family to do each weekend... even if it is just going for a ride in the country or shopping at an open air market.

Spouse - during semester breaks, make time for the two of you for a day or two. Get away from the kids and reconnect.

Kids - DON'T bring home "gifts" or try to compensate for not being there. It accentuates your absence. You want this to become "the routine" and natural for the kids.

Household - You have to let your spouse have more control of the household decisions than you'd like. This will be a big area of conflict. You just have to accept that they are making those decisions, often without you, and you'll have to be supportive of their decision. If not, you'll be paving the path to divorce.

Finally, at some point in the semester, have your family "visit" you at school and spend the night at your "apartment" (if possible). Let your kids know where you are at night.

djmystical

This is very hard. I'm a 1L and my best friend at school is doing it. She left husband and kids to attend law school. She sometimes looks depressed, and terribly misses her home. It's hard for her to be living in a room when she used to have her own home. She only plans on going home every couple months because it's far, and her husband visits every couple of months. It seems to be pretty hard for her, so only do this if you have a very solid marriage that can withstand it, and even then, only if you really have no other choice, and you absolutely have to go to law school.

Wow...going mos. w/out spouse...that's hard to imagine. I *think* I'll do ok, because I will drive home every weekend. Right now my husband works a diff. shift than I do, so I already am used to not seeing him a lot. I'm hoping that just being away during the week will work out for us. I'm limiting the schools I'll be applying to (geographically), because I will not move to a school that I can not commute home from.